H
Hesychios
Guest
Your comments are not without merit. I think that these things can, and should, be discussed. Meat for the (negotiating) table.I will not dispute the bulk of the post, (in main I agree), but the bolded portion is another matter. How very typical of Moscow thinking, whether religious or secular. They’re so worried about others respecting their territory, but they neglect to note that they have done the exact same thing. In the case of the Moscow Patriarchate, it has established its own eparchies (whether autocephalic or missionary dependencies, it doesn’t matter) in the the canonical West. Supposedly this is to seve the Russian Orthodox faithful, but the fact remains that they are territorially and geographically out of their canonical jurisdiction. (One could draw a few secular parallels, whether from Imperial Russia, or Soviet Union, or post-Soviet Russia, but there’s no reason to go that far off topic and I will not do so.)
Don’t get me wrong: I have no quarrel with the extra-territorial foundations per se, but please: one Patriarchate should not accuse another Patriarchate of doing what it itself does, especially when both are guilty of the same type of violation of canonical territory. Just MHO, though I fear I’ve knocked down a hornets nest.
I think the Russian position still has validity however. Before the great schism almost 1000 years ago, Latin parishes in the east would have been under the local Patriarch, and Greek churches in the west would have been under the local Patriarch (namely, the bishop of Rome). If there is ever intercommunion between the churches again the possibility of the Latin parishes in Russia coming under the Patriarch of Moscow should be explored, as well as the possibility of the Byzantine Orthodox parishes in western Europe coming under the Patriarch at Rome. This could restore the older ecclesiology of the church.
Of course, this would require that we all trust one another to a much greater degree than we have up until now.